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Complete Issue. In: InterDisciplines. Journal of History and Sociology. Jg.3 H. 2. 17.12.2012
Inhalt
References
Towards a New Cultural History of Law
Daniel Siemens
Is legal history the exclusive domain of legal historians?
Current research on the cultural history of law
Comparative and transnational research on law and history: Which way to go?
References
Justice as ›performance‹? The historiography of legal procedure and political criminal justice in Weimar Germany
Henning Grunwald
I.
II.
III.
References
Universalization, Particularization, and Discrimination. European Perspectives on a Cultural History of 19th century International Law
Miloš Vec
Universalization: From Europe to the whole world
Jus Gentium universale or the extension of natural law
Equality and its limitations
Particularization
Positivistic turn and explicit Europeanization
Historicism and sources of international law: the Europeanization of Europe
Welcome to the club, sovereigns!
Christendom
Civilization
A structural discrimination
Conclusion
References
»Law and society« in imperial Russia
Stefan B. Kirmse
Introduction
Studying law and legal practice: Towards interdisciplinarity
Studying law in the Russian Empire: Omissions and achievements
Some reflections on promising avenues of research
Property claims in late imperial circuit courts: Some evidence from Crimea
Conclusion
References
Globalization of legal cultures in the 19th century. Criminal trials, gender, and the public in Meiji Japan
Daniel Hedinger
Introduction64F
The case
Figure 1: »Kinsei jinbutsushi. Hanai Oume,« Coloured newspaper page by Tsukioka Yoshitoshi, 1877. Source: Yamamoto Shinbun, Nr. 263, 20 Aug. 1887.
The legal background
The Trial
Figure 2: »Notes from the public trial of Hanai Ume,« Black-and-white print, double page. Artist unknown. Source: Satō 1887: 26–27.
The Aftermath
Conclusion
References
Economic perspectives on the history of law: Property rights in business history100F
Ulrike Schulz
Introduction
The abstract core of property: Assigning agents specific scopes of action and decision-making capacities
The link: »Recognition« as a key concept in property rights theory
Property rights structures in firms
The (individual) agent
The negotiation process
Fig. 1: The negotiation process over property rights
The process of juridification
Fig. 2: The organization of the firm: The interrelation between the capital strain side and the production side
Conclusion
References
Priority, Property, and Trust
Patent law and pharmaceuticals in the German Empire101F
Axel C. Hüntelmann
Law in the history of science. Legal aspects and patent law in the history of pharmaceuticals
The state regulation of pharmaceuticals
(Pre-)history of patent law and pharmaceuticals
Before there were patents: Quarrels about priority and originality
Patents and science in action. The importance of patents at the Institute for Experimental Therapy and the Georg Speyer House
Economic capital and public trust. The patenting of Friedmann’s tuberculosis remedy
Wrapping up—the relation between patent law, priority, property, and trust in a broader context
References